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Cyclin D1 overexpression in AIDS-related and classic Kaposi sarcoma.
Authors:Angela Hong  Stewart Davies  Graham Stevens  C Soon Lee
Institution:Department of Pathology, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Abstract:The anatomic distribution and rate of progression vary significantly between acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related Kaposi sarcoma (KS) and classic KS. The reasons are unclear, but cyclin D1 overexpression is associated with tumor progression in other malignancies. Cyclin D has an important regulatory role in the progression of cell cycle at the G1-S phase due to its effect in phosphorylating the retinoblastoma gene product. Forty-one paraffin-embedded surgical specimens (31 AIDS-related, 10 classic) were examined using streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase immunohistochemistry with monoclonal antibody to cyclin D1. A scoring system based on the intensity and extent of staining was used. The correlations among cyclin D1 expression and clinicopathologic parameters were statistically analyzed. Cyclin D1 overexpression was found in 29% (12/41) of all KS cases. There was a strong correlation between cyclin D1 overexpression and pathologic stage (0% in patch stage, 13% in plaque stage, 50% in nodular stage; P = 0.0017). Classic KS lesions had a higher incidence of cyclin D1 overexpression than AIDS-related lesions (70% vs 16%, P = 0.001). Cyclin D1 overexpression was detected in 78% of the classic nodular lesions and 31% of the AIDS-related nodular lesions (P = 0.03). On multivariate analysis, negative human immunodeficiency virus status (P = 0.001) and nodular lesions (P = 0.007) were strong predictors of cyclin D1 overexpression. Age, gender, recurrence of the tumor, multiplicity, and site of the lesions hold no statistically significant association with cyclin D1 expression on multivariate analysis. In summary, cyclin D1 overexpression was more prevalent in classic lesions and more advanced nodular stage. These findings raise the possibility of a different pathogenetic mechanism in the progression of AIDS-related KS and classic KS.
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